Identifying epileptogenic abnormality by decomposing intracranial EEG and MEG power spectra
Csaba Kozma, Gabrielle Schroeder, Tom Owen, Jane de Tisi, Andrew W., McEvoy, Anna Miserocchi, John Duncan, Yujiang Wang, Peter N. Taylor

TL;DR
This study decomposes intracranial EEG and MEG spectra into periodic and aperiodic components to identify epileptogenic abnormalities, improving localization and outcome prediction in epilepsy surgery.
Contribution
It introduces a combined approach analyzing both periodic and aperiodic spectral components for better identification of epileptogenic zones.
Findings
Complete band power abnormalities distinguish surgical outcomes.
Periodic and aperiodic abnormalities together improve localization.
Aperiodic exponent highest in temporal lobe.
Abstract
Identifying abnormal electroencephalographic activity is crucial in diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy. Recent studies showed that decomposing brain activity into periodic (oscillatory) and aperiodic (trend across all frequencies) components may illuminate drivers of changes in spectral activity. Using iEEG data from 234 subjects, we constructed a normative map and compared this with a separate cohort of 63 patients with refractory focal epilepsy being considered for neurosurgery. The normative map was computed using three approaches: (i) relative complete band power, (ii) relative band power with the aperiodic component removed (iii) the aperiodic exponent. Corresponding abnormalities were also calculated for each approach in the separate patient cohort. We investigated the spatial profiles of the three approaches, assessed their localizing ability, and replicated our findings in a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Neural dynamics and brain function · Epilepsy research and treatment
